What happens to water at a treatment plant?
What happens to the treated water when it leaves the wastewater treatment plant? The treated wastewater is released into local waterways where it's used again for any number of purposes, such as supplying drinking water, irrigating crops, and sustaining aquatic life.
How is water cleaned in a sewage treatment plant?
The wastewater enters an aeration tank, where it is mixed with sludge. Air is then pumped into the aeration tank to facilitate the growth of bacteria and other small organisms within the sludge. The bacteria and other microorganisms break down the organic matter in the water into harmless byproducts.
How does a treatment plant work?
Using internal mechanisms, a sewage treatment plant works by breaking down solid waste to produce a cleaner, more environmentally friendly effluent. Wastewater and sewage are supplied to the primary tank, where the solids and liquids disperse. The resulting liquor flows into the biozone chamber.
What do wastewater treatment plants do to make wastewater safer?
Wastewater treatment plants are engineered to disinfect treated wastewater through chlorination and/or ultraviolet light disinfection processes as a final step that successfully eliminate viruses not destroyed in the other layers of treatment.